With all of our imperfections, we begin and end each day at the foot of the cross. It is here where our story begins and we pray it is where it will end. "Jesus said: Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light." ~Matthew 11:28-30~

Listen to God's voice at the foot of the crucifix." ~St. Gaspar del Bufaro~

Sunday, June 18, 2017

A marriage has ended and a family is broken. My heart feels like a gaping wound.Yet it is surreal.I pinch myself here in this little blog window. Is it really true?Sadly, it is.I never dreamed such sorrow could consume me once again. I remember similar feelings after my late husband was tragically killed.Here I am losing a beloved spouse in a different way. The price of love is almost too great to bear.

It's been almost 3 years working through this tragedy and my heart still hurts all the time. My brain hurts too. Both my heart and my head still struggle to process all that has happened. Especially because things were good and happy in my house until the lies rolled out. It's still so hard to believe that such an incredible charade took place right before my eyes.

Like a bomb going off, I discovered that betrayal and pathological lies staggered through the 17 years of our marriage and suddenly came to light in shocking ways, including sexual addiction. In fact, I've heard stories like mine on television talk shows and now one of them showed up in my house. Uninvited. I am that person who had no clue. It was honestly like the father of lies suddenly appeared and shattered our family in one fell swoop. It has truly been Unbelievable.Love still held out hope that maybe a miracle could occur with humility and true reconciliation. I hoped and prayed, for my children's sake, that a miracle recovery and conversion would take place. It was my biggest prayer to have my husband and family back, the way it was 'before.'

No miracle came. This was another tragedy for all of us. With every bone in my body, I feel the broken bonds of our marriage in the hearts of my children. Marriage is clearly not just about the husband and wife. Our bond created more life and love through our children and they are crushed a long with us. We should never underestimate the damage that an earthquake causes to a house... Everyone who lives there is affected. I suppose that's why the word divorce sounds bad. It sounds like walls dividing and crumbling down.

So the question is how do you put your house and heart back together after such an earthquake of the heart rumbles through your life? How does someone rebuild a house of love? Now there's a happy word! Rebuild. It's possible, as we all know. We've seen it happen all around us. Even the horrific 9/11 brought rebuilding and restoration. This is where I am now. I'm struggling with rebuilding and restoration in the midst of human damage. I'm learning that it takes a real and honest look at the carnage...resentment and other broken pieces of my heart... to see how it's affecting spiritual and physical progress. Maybe by putting myself out there in all of my weakness, others might find hope and healing a long with me. At times, I have never felt so alone. What breaks people out of this is loneliness is getting it out, talking, writing, etc. If you have ever experienced betrayal trauma, (or any other trauma) you know this. You cannot remain silent. You must be able to talk about it. Even if it reaches one person who needs to know that someone else walks with them, I am here.

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and God of all encouragement, who encourages us in our every affliction, so that we may be able to encourage those who are in any affliction with the encouragement with which we ourselves are encouraged by God. For as Christ's sufferings overflow to us, so through Christ does our encouragement also overflow.

~2 Corinthians 1:3-5~

It is finished.

These were also the last word's of Christ on the Cross.I'm sitting with this for now.As Christians, we know the death of Jesus, those last words he spoke, brought hope.This is what I cling to.I carry this cross in the name of hope.Please pray for my family's healing.

"I will restore you to health; of your wounds I will heal you, says the Lord." ~Jer. 30:17

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

As Christians enter this week reflecting on the brutal murder of our Savior, we often wince at the thought of it. Yet, we know what happens at the end of the story...The bloody mess is what saves us.Only during Lent do Catholics have the opportunity to attend Friday Stations of the Cross. During each of the 7 Lenten Fridays, we can choose to listen to the agony as we enter the scene that Jesus suffered. We bow our heads and drop to our knees in prayer as we mediate upon the different stages of the death march. Inevitably, I find myself weeping at some point during the 30 minutes as we reflect on what occurred that Good Friday long ago. Not only does it help us remember what happened but it reminds us of the direction we should be heading.

This Lent, I made a commitment to our parish Stations of the Cross. I only missed one week. We have typically made an effort each year but this year was different. This year, I felt drawn, almost invited, to truly live Good Friday each week. It was difficult to keep our calendar clear on Friday nights at 6:00 but it was worth it. Entering the Passion of Christ is truly one of the most amazing spiritual exercises.

I have learned the hard way that it is there, in the bloody mess of Calvary, that we are not alone. No matter the size of my cross, your cross, our family's cross, we are not alone. In fact, we are never closer to Christ than when we climb that road to Golgotha by His side.

As I continue to suffer the after shock of trauma in my own life, it really helps me to visualize the blood on Christ's face, and the wounds on his human body. He knew that we would suffer too and we'd need a lot of help to get through it! This year, having my family broken by impending divorce, feels like trauma on the inside. My cross is heavy but I find consolation knowing that He knows. After all, Calvary was the ultimate trauma.

I take one day at a time right now. The memories of countless lies and betrayal threaten my sanity. Mixed with the confusion of happy memories, I still find it troubling how all of this has transpired in my marriage without me knowing. How in the world did this happen? Why did this happen? This Lent, I have felt particularly tortured as my brain randomly rolls from memory to memory in an inescapable attempt to process what has occurred. "Letting go" is simply not possible and I have been certain that my head might explode. Yet for 30 minutes each Friday I thought about the crown of thorns that pierced God's precious head and saw my reflection in the blood dripping down his face. Those are my wounds, your wounds, the world's wounds, that he bleeds. He knows our heads are suffering from many wounds. He takes them on so that we might heal, one step at a time.

Even then, healing is a process and we still need to keep moving forward with our crosses. Things don't get better overnight. Lest we forget, He shows us how to do this too. Last week, I was having a "bad day" carrying my cross. I was cleaning out the garage and having a pity party about all the burden of the work and junk that was left for me to bear alone. Suddenly my neighbor appeared to say hello. She just felt that she was supposed to tell me that I won't be buried by the burdens I was carrying. Suddenly,I recalled Good Friday. Jesus' friends left him and even betrayed him during his suffering. He found himself unexpectedly accepting help from strangers like Simon of Cyrene who helped Jesus pick up the Cross...And Veronica who wiped His face. Once again, I was not alone. Little did my neighbor know that she just wiped my bloody face. She was my Veronica. He knows what we need and when we need it. His trail of blood leads us home.

As Good Friday arrives, I know it's time for me to accept the challenge of my own Good Fridays...again. Sometimes we get multiple Good Fridays to help us stay with Him. Sometimes we're carrying a cross and sometimes we are called to be Simon or Veronica. Either way, if we stay the course, we are never alone.

He took on our bloody mess.

He walked the walk.

He stumbled and fell and got back up.He never quit.

He suffered a piercing death.

He sacrificed that we might live.

He saves us from ourselves.

He is unconditional love.

His resurrection is Easter~the dawn of eternal life.

We find Easter in our bloody mess...Our mess is His mess. The bloody mess saves us.

Friday, November 25, 2016

The holidays are upon us and I recognize this heavy weight on my soul...It's grief calling again. I smile on the outside but the grief over my broken family is a deep ache, down to my core, that doesn't let up. This is the first holiday that my husband lives apart from us...Just when I've been sitting well with the suffering these past few weeks, I stumble and fall now. Grief is like that. Things like holidays can trigger loneliness or sadness and the pattern continues with two steps forward, one step back. The pain ebbs and flows. As the waves wash over, I blink and hang on. The memories haunt me as I wonder about love. I mourn the wedding vows. I crumple to my knees by the side of the bed where we held hands every night.

The very honest thing is that it's devastating to have a broken family during a season that once held unity and togetherness. It hurts, terribly. Wait, I recognize this pain. I've been here before, aching over another husband's tragic death, clinging to our baby boy during the holidays. Never would I have dreamed I'd be here again.

This time I'm alone in our family home with 4 more children. Their Dad still sees them but emotions are strained and our home is empty of him. I know it, they know it. It feels like a punch to the gut as I watch them hurt from the severed bond of sacred family. This is the exhausting reality of our daily life and magnified now, during a season that should be filled with our family in tact. I've learned that it's not a pity party to talk about loss because the acknowledgement of the hurt enables us to work through it, heal, and keep moving. Otherwise, we get stuck. Right now we need to keep our souls moving towards the light...Namely towards the star of hope.

Lord, help us focus on this family, the Holy Family...This is the real family that our Holey family should cling to.

The hard reality is that separation (or divorce) are different kinds of death. All people in the family are suffering and grieving. We didn't ask for this and we have no control. Highlighting the death is the fact that it's even more awkward for those who encounter us. The dear souls who acknowledge the "death" and offer their hearts to us are treasures. I am grateful for those who check in, knowing the treacherous journey we are on. Unfortunately, many people avoid us which compounds the sadness. This stirs a calling in my soul to write about it. I encourage others to reach out and not shrink away from the victims of broken families.

It's exactly this that brings me to Advent in a broken family. No one feels quite as broken if they have hands to hold on to.

I catch a glimpse of four long faces fixed upon me for guidance...How are we going to do this?

Yes, let's think about how we're going to do this...What I know for sure is that we are not alone. There are countless people suffering this time of year except now it includes us. A plan comes to my heart...I hope this plan also helps others who might be suffering during this time of year.In the spirit of keeping things simple, I propose four pledges or goals for our Broken Family Advent. They represent the 4 weeks that we should consider an opportunity to carry the weight of grief to the manger on the road to Bethlehem. As the Holy Family surely encountered...The road is not easy. We know this by now...The best rewards are never easy. Yet, we will walk it, we'll keep moving, and we'll get there! We will arrive with hearts ready to peer over the manger, gazing into the face of a baby Savior.

The Broken Road To Bethlehem:We will read these on the first Sunday of Advent and each week, holding tight to the hands around us.

Week 1. I vow to reach out to those who might be suffering. We are the body of Christ and when we give, we receive. This is the best gift of the season. Let us look for little ways that we can reach out and pray for others, even if we cannot afford to give with money. We will keep a list of prayer intentions by our wreath.

Getting out of ourselves, gets us into the manger.

Week 2. I vow to think of all those "others" when I'm worn out from the toils of the day, the season, alone with the weight of my grief. In these moments, I will light the candles on our Advent wreath in the honor of all the others who suffer. The silence of my soul will echo prayer and unite my broken heart with theirs. Let me remember that light casts out darkness.

Let us close our eyes and remember the Star of Bethlehem... A beacon of hope that beckons.

Week 3. I vow to be thankful. Here lies the best glimpse of the season and it begins in the manger. If I truly love the Christ baby who came to relieve us of this earthly suffering through His birth, death, and resurrection, I will pause each day in thanksgiving. Let us share the thankful things in our lives each week with one another.

A Savior's birth is the dawn of gratitude...The bridge from death to life.

Week 4. I vow to hold baby Jesus. Let us practice holding Him this last week of Advent. If I look into His eyes, I will see the whole world...He came for everyone. Let us see ourselves, along with all those we struggle with, in the eyes of this Godly baby. Let us see that he loves all of us. May this help us grow in love and reconcile our sorrows.

From the crib to the cross, He shows us how to live and love.

Advent in a broken family will be an arduous walk to Bethlehem but the joy at the destination will be worth it. May we all be reminded that the peace of that baby King is the best beginning and the happiest ending.

***

+Please keep our family in your prayers. If you are all together as a family, please treasure that...I would have never dreamed this would happen to us. If you are experiencing brokenness, please let me know how we can pray for you. Leave your requests in the comments or email me. It would be a great gift to offer up my suffering/our suffering to pray for you+

Thursday, September 29, 2016

I'm not a perfect person but I am a real one...Fabulous at 50? Definitely not. I have to be honest and say that I've been dreading turning 50 in the middle of my family tragedy. It's next week for goodness sakes...Couldn't this come at a different time? A happy time? It doesn't seem fair, as I pound my fist on the table! At this landmark time that others celebrate with joy, I'm filled with sorrow and endings...I'm seriously tempted to believe the lie that life is completely awful when we suffer.

Suffering is awful, yes it certainly is. But completely awful...No. Being real, I have to admit that suffering is beautiful at the same time. Many lovely people emerge to help, God shows his face, just when we need it most...I may not have seen God's face otherwise. Clinging to what is good in my life, I see light in the darkness.

During Adoration one day, I felt that I saw joy and pain sitting together arguing about who would make the soul better, stronger, wiser. Suddenly, they realized that they were not opposing forces after all. Instead, they both offered strength and wisdom in different ways that all humans need for their salvation. It became apparent that we cannot have one without the other. Joy and pain are synonymous. Separated from one of these, we are broken. Having both together, we are strong. Encompassed in this is the Cross that Christ suffered and bore for us. He loved us so much that he suffered. There on the Cross we see the ultimate dream team.. joy and pain unite for the good of humanity. Knowing we cannot have one without the other helped me see clearly how I should journey ahead...

Monday, August 15, 2016

I love the feast days of the church...The days to really hone in on what anchors us. These days give us the opportunity to celebrate the real warriors of faith, gone before us to teach us how to survive this life. Today is one of those days. Go figure, it comes at a time when I needed it most. God is good!Being crushed by the mystery of what has happened to our family, I woke up crying this morning. I sobbed in bewilderment about why we weren't worth fighting for. Feeling a deep punch to my gut as I wondered about the ripple effects of decisions beyond my control, I spun with confusion. Knowing I will never truly understand what has transpired, I questioned how on earth I will do this life now? Momentarily, I felt abandoned and terribly alone.

Photo taken back in March-St. Mary's Our Lady of Fatima

Suddenly, a glimpse of heaven shined through a holy mother...The Mother Christ gave us Himself. She's our Mother, your Mother, my Mother...She did this life, just like us. She walked a road of suffering and agony, continuing to say Yes to God from the 1st day He asked her to bear His son, to the last day He took her to heaven. How glorious that day must have been for her...To finally be at peace forever, with the Holy Trinity.

This feast day of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary is a perfect reminder.

I'm dreaming of that. I'm dreaming of heaven...Not in a morbid way but with great excitement for the ultimate goal. It actually fuels me to keep moving forward, to keep going on this sojourn. No matter how painful it is, I know I am not alone and there's much splendor and happiness to look forward to.

Dreaming of heaven gives me the strength to keep teaching the faith in our home, even as a single mother. A prayer life and rhythm of the church year are still alive here. I vow to keep the light on. We are still a family, bound together by love that can never be discarded. Humans can discard humans but you can't ditch God's love. Hope may dim on our dark and sorrowful days but it can always be rekindled. Days such as this are a beautiful reminder that good things always come with our eyes fixed on heaven.

What a day to celebrate!

I huddled with my children around the kitchen sink this morning, before they left for school, and we prayed for our Mother to give us strength like hers. Like birds taking shelter in a storm, it may have been a desperate plea but prayer just the same. May she always keep us close to her Son, Jesus Christ...The heavenly host and true love of our lives.

Our Lady's love is like a limpid stream that has its source in the Eternal Fountains, quenches the thirst of all, can never be drained, and ever flows back to its Source.

Favorite Prayers

A Prayer of the Cure' of Ars, St. John Vianney (Patron Saint of Priests) in the Year of The Priest

I love you, O my God and my only desire is to love you until the last breath of my life. I love you, O my infinitely lovable God, and I would rather die loving you, than live without loving you. I love you, Lord, and the only grace I ask is to love you eternally....My God, if my tongue cannot say in every moment that I love you, I want my heart to repeat it to you as often as I draw breath.Amen

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The Anima Christi (Soul of Christ)

Soul of Christ, sanctify me

Body of Christ, save me

Blood of Christ, inebriate me

Water from Christ's side, wash me

Passion of Christ, strengthen me

O good Jesus, hear me

Within Thy wounds hide me

Suffer me not to be separated from Thee

From the malicious enemy defend me

In the hour of my death call me And bid me come unto Thee That I may praise Thee with Thy saints and with Thy angels Forever and ever.

Amen

The Anima Christi is a prayer from around the 14th century. It is still widely used after receiving the body and blood of Our Lord, Jesus Christ in Holy Communion.